This depends on the Queen. Some cats will be back on heat immediately after and others will not come back on call for weeks afterwards. This is why it is ideal to spay the mother cat as soon as the kittens are weaned, or kept indoors and away from any male cats to prevent her getting pregnant immediately afterwards. It is cruel and detrimental to the female's health if she is allowed to carry another litter straight after the last one; she would have no chance of resting and recovering from the last litter. A queen will need "time off" to get her weight and strength back up
It's possible for a cat to go back into heat AND become pregnant in as little as one week after giving birth. If the mama was let outside for any length or time or exposed to a male cat, then chances are you'll have another litter on your hands. She can be aborted if she's not too far along, and nursing mother cats can be spayed. They will produce enough milk for their current litter.
This depends on the Queen. Some cats will be back on heat immediately after and others will not come back on call for weeks afterwards. This is why it is ideal to spay the mother cat as soon as the kittens are weaned, or kept indoors and away from any male cats to prevent her getting pregnant immediately afterwards. It is cruel and detrimental to the female's health if she is allowed to carry another litter straight after the last one; she would have no chance of resting and recovering from the last litter. A queen will need "time off" to get her weight and strength back up.
last spring our mama cat went back into heat 3 weeks after having her first litter and she was still nursing
Four to Five months if kittens are with her; but if kittens are gone EVEN SOONER! So make sure to keep your cat away from male cats for a while!
straight away, this has happened to my cat :) shes not in heat but shes msating again after 2 weeks of having her first litter. ;)
she does right away within the hour.
No, the kittens need all the milk they can get. Just feed her better food and help her not be so thin. You can help by nursing the kittens yourself as well at intervals if they are still hungry, but the kittens should NOT be separated from their mother, especially when you can help them.
If it is very young and is still nursing then PLEASE DONT DO IT. The kittens will want to drink that instead and stop nursing from their mother, therefore dying from lackof nutrients. If the mother is dead, then buy a substitute. If the kittens have stopped nursing, I still wouldn't let them drink it until they are three months old because it is hard for them to digest it at such a young age. Hope this helps:)
no
Kittens no and mother of the kittens no. The Cat should way more than usual because she is still nursing her kittens so the kittens can gain weight and grow :) Hope your new additions arent too much of a handfull
Mostly when they are done nursing and can eat solid food. She still monitors their behavior,but may get up and walk away from nursing hangers-on.
Even though the mother has not been seen she is lurking somewhere nearby. queens often leave kittens unattended to find food. also, if the kittens are young there is a good chance they are still nursing, i watch animal cops and have seen this kind of thing before. do NOT move the kittens, the cops removed the kittens no one had seen their mother, well the nursing queen arrived just as they were leaving with the kittens, the female ran away and never came back, so they found the 6 day old kittens a new momma with fresher milk, your unseen momma cat is somewhere nearby and remember DON'T move the kittens.
Tom cats go after all female cats, and do not know that they are unable to have kittens.
no you cant because being adopted would mean that the kittens wouldn't have a mother to eat from. Well actually it depends on their age a proper age to adopt them out is 8-10 weeks old.
Cats nurse kittens until the kittens are about four or five weeks old. At this age, kittens begin to wean and are able to eat soft kitten food. The mother cat's teets will dry and retract slightly. The only true way to tell if a cat is still nursing kittens is through observation.
A cat can get pregnant while they are still nursing a litter. A cat will be pregnant for about 58-63 days after conception.
This usually depends on how old the kittens are and the individual mother cat. Usually a female cat will come back into season after her current kittens are weaned. However, some cats' cycles can start again when her kittens are still very young, and some will not come into heat again for many months after the kittens are weaned.
She might still be giving birth. It takes a long time sometimes.